current state of Firefox (history, text data, cookies) and return
to that state at any later moment. Besides the manually saved states,
Session Manager automatically stores the current state in case of a
crash.
All sessions are stored in the "sessions" folder inside your profile
directory and can be moved around as any other file. To get to that
folder, simply select "Open Session Folder" in Session Manager's menu
(might not work on all OSes). Finally, Session Manager also allows to
reopen the 10 last closed windows and tabs.
It is not recommended to use Session Manager at the same time as Crash
Recovery (which is completely integrated), SessionSaver or Tab Mix Plus
(which provide similar functionality on their own). In comparison,
Session Manager currently stores more session data than Tab Mix Plus
while not getting as complex as SessionSaver.
WWW: http://sessionmanager.mozdev.org/
A new version of the powerful solver has been released. Changes include:
* Reduced memory usage for symmetric matrices (compressed CB)
* Reduced memory allocation for parallel executions
* Scheduler parameters for parallel executions modified
* Memory estimates (that were too large) corrected with
2Dcyclic Schur complement option
* Portability improved (C/Fortran interfacing for strings)
* The situation leading to Warning "RHS associated in MUMPS_301"
no more occurs.
* Parameters INFO/RINFO from the Scilab/Matlab API are now called
INFOG/RINFOG in order to match the MUMPS user's guide.
PR: ports/99393
Submitted by: Pedro F. Giffuni <giffunip (at) asme.org>
- Remove obsolete explanations which are no longer seen, for speed:
ELF, MOTIF, MOTIFLIB, X_manpage, awk, bison, ffs_conflict, forbidden,
getopt, getopt.h, imake, lc_r, malloc.h, pod2man, sed, stl, soundcard.h,
texinfo, union_wait, values.h
- Add more cases to: arch, bad_c++, compiler_error, depend_object,
install_error, linker_error, mtree, perl5
These changes reduce many dozens of false positives; add a few dozen
true positives; and for certain directories, improve the speed about 10%
(a few drop by 15%).
It turns out that the performance issues are mainly due to the multiple
greps. If performance is an issue we need to go back to the moderately-
unreadable, everything-on-one-line paradigm. Before that happens, I would
like to experiment with some refactoring, so that the patterns are built up
in the shell line-by-line, so you could still be able to read it.
Tested on: pointyhat
Hat: portmgr
- no longer override do-build
- define a new regression-test target depending on build that calls the
package's regression test scripts and allows for automated regression
testing on the ports cluster
PR: ports/99427
Submitted by: maintainer
of the moon.
Author: David Stevenson <david.35472@gmail.com>
WWW: http://www.enlightenment.org
PR: ports/99366
Submitted by: Stanislav Sedov <ssedov@mbsd.msk.ru>
- display text and/or graph
- display text in percentage or absolute
Author: Matthew Mullins
WWW: http://www.enlightenment.org
PR: ports/99365
Submitted by: Stanislav Sedov <ssedov@mbsd.msk.ru>